The Babel Range: Why High‑Range Tests Drift Toward Private Languages
The Babel Range: Why High‑Range Tests Drift Toward Private Languages I have spent an unreasonable portion of my adult life watching high‑range IQ tests mutate. What began as a niche hobby—an odd corner of the internet where people solved puzzles for sport—has evolved into something stranger: a linguistic archipelago of private dialects, each spoken by exactly one person, the test author. The more I look at these tests, the more they resemble a Tower of Babel built in reverse: not a single language fracturing into many, but many languages invented to avoid being understood. The designers call this innovation. I call it drift. The drift begins innocently enough. A test is released. People solve it. Someone posts a solution key. Someone else writes a solver. A third person feeds it to a search engine. A fourth person feeds it to an AI. The designer, horrified that their creation has been “compromised,” vows to build a purer test next time—one that cannot be solved by search, by...